Mercurial > hg > mercurial-crew-with-dirclash
view mercurial/fancyopts.py @ 1739:57de7e1a81d2
AmbiguousCommand is raised too soon.
Right now, hg raises AmbiguousCommand as soon as it finds two
commands/aliases that start with the substring it's searching for, even
though it may still find a full match later on.
This is a bit hard to hit on purpose, because hg checks the list of
commands in whatever order is returned by table.keys(), which will
change when you add an alias to a command. You should be able to hit it
by adding an alias "u" to the "identify" command - not that that makes a
lot of sense...
author | Alexis S. L. Carvalho <alexis@cecm.usp.br> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 17 Feb 2006 17:41:23 -0600 |
parents | bf4e7ef08741 |
children | eb0b4a2d70a9 |
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import getopt def fancyopts(args, options, state): long = [] short = '' map = {} dt = {} for s, l, d, c in options: pl = l.replace('-', '_') map['-'+s] = map['--'+l] = pl state[pl] = d dt[pl] = type(d) if not d is None and not callable(d): if s: s += ':' if l: l += '=' if s: short = short + s if l: long.append(l) opts, args = getopt.getopt(args, short, long) for opt, arg in opts: if dt[map[opt]] is type(fancyopts): state[map[opt]](state,map[opt],arg) elif dt[map[opt]] is type(1): state[map[opt]] = int(arg) elif dt[map[opt]] is type(''): state[map[opt]] = arg elif dt[map[opt]] is type([]): state[map[opt]].append(arg) elif dt[map[opt]] is type(None): state[map[opt]] = 1 return args